Thielen has certainly had a career for more than a decade in the league and made his way up from an unreasonable free agent signed by Minnesota to Carolina’s foremost receiver every last two seasons, with some choice of Pro Bowl on the way.
Thielen grew in success in his nine periods who played with the Vikings and slowly won the initial role. His maximum year came in 2017 and 2018 when he exceeded 1,200 meters of both campaigns to earn his Pro Bowl kinks, but Thielen maintained a relatively stable production level as the WR2 until he was released in 2022.
He then signed a three -year contract with Panthers and from the beginning, an elder was an presence in young Panthers offenses and security networks for Bryce Young where the team manager found his foot in the NFL. Over the past two seasons, Thielen stood for 1,629 who received meters and nine matches in 27 games, including picking up more than double catches and receiving meters of the next Panther player in 2023, which is an impressive steady performance for one of the league’s oldest spread.
In the fall, it will probably look a little different in the distribution of targets with the rise in the second year of WR Xavier Legste and Tetairoa McMillan last week, although Thielen still calculates the initial equation.
With only the 2025 period left of its contract, the coming year will have questions about what the next steps are for Thielen. But it is a topic of discussion in the second day where he keeps his focus on leading his team in their continued reconstruction work. Pension talks can wait for next spring.
“I’m not thinking about it now. I’m going to focus on being the best footballer I can be and you have to have that mindset in this league,” said Thielen. “And then when the season is over – see, see where we are, see where the team is, see where I am in each and as a family and figure it out. But sure